The new seven deadly sins
The NY Times article on the new seven deadly sins:
Lust, gluttony, greed and the rest of the seven deadly sins gathered in the 6th century will have to get used to a modern companion. A Vatican official has articulated seven new categories of sin “due to the phenomenon of globalization.”
“While sin used to concern mostly the individual, today it has mainly a social resonance,” Monsignor Gianfranco Girotti told L’Osservatore Romano, Vatican City’s local paper. Bloomberg News parsed his remarks into a clip-n-savable list:
1. “Bioethical” violations such as birth control
2. “Morally dubious” experiments such as stem cell research
3. Drug abuse
4. Polluting the environment
5. Contributing to widening divide between rich and poor
6. Excessive wealth
7. Creating poverty
The message, according to a leading scholar on Catholic thought talking to BBC News, was meant as a reality check to priests “not sufficiently attuned to some of the real evils in our world.” There is more to life than following the Ten Commandments, it would seem.
The seven deadly sins served another purpose, too: inspiring artists from Bosch to Balanchine. Can anyone picture a similar renaissance fueled by this new list. Or has it already happened?
---What would you add? or take off the list? It also seems harder to do a Top Chef challenge based on these sins...
1 Comments:
Well, I would definitely take 1 and 2 off the list, and probably 3 as well.
I also think it's ironic that "excessive wealth" made the list, considering the opulence of the Vatican. The Pope ain't exactly living in poverty.
Also interesting that the first four are clearly political issues, whereas the original 7 sins aren't really.
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